Steam 설치
로그인
|
언어
简体中文(중국어 간체)
繁體中文(중국어 번체)
日本語(일본어)
ไทย(태국어)
Български(불가리아어)
Čeština(체코어)
Dansk(덴마크어)
Deutsch(독일어)
English(영어)
Español - España(스페인어 - 스페인)
Español - Latinoamérica(스페인어 - 중남미)
Ελληνικά(그리스어)
Français(프랑스어)
Italiano(이탈리아어)
Bahasa Indonesia(인도네시아어)
Magyar(헝가리어)
Nederlands(네덜란드어)
Norsk(노르웨이어)
Polski(폴란드어)
Português(포르투갈어 - 포르투갈)
Português - Brasil(포르투갈어 - 브라질)
Română(루마니아어)
Русский(러시아어)
Suomi(핀란드어)
Svenska(스웨덴어)
Türkçe(튀르키예어)
Tiếng Việt(베트남어)
Українська(우크라이나어)
번역 관련 문제 보고
At launch the Deck had zero task switching in Gaming Mode, and people posted asking for this by the dozens.
The problem with gaming mode is that it was designed with single-app fullscreen to cut some performance penalties that traditional desktop environments, window management and etc cause. (see articles on GameScope)
It's not impossible to add task switching in that context but it is non-trivial.
That being said, Valve is also a bit clumsy with bugs that have been making this harder than it needed to be, eg: an unrelated bug causing ocasional full system freezes when opening the steam menu (which where the task switching option is in)
Linux works differently than windos.
It consists of pieces that you can freely combine.
Under windos you have one desktop, but under Linux you have any number of programs that are desktops.
Steam deck (which I do not have) has one desktop that is similar to a game console. And one desktop that is similar to a computer desktop.
From what it seems to me you do not switch to the desktop, but something like reboot windos and turn it back on with another desktop.
(Probably) If you want to have a browser in the background, start deck in computer pc mode and run the game from the desktop there. Then you will have your desktop available and any programs you are running. This will be slightly less performance in the game. That is why such a solution was used.